A novel ascomycetous endophytic association in the rhizoids of the leafy liverwort family, Schistochilaceae (Jungermanniidae, Hepaticopsida).

2008 
Liverworts form diverse associations with endophytic fungi similar to mycorrhizas in vascular plants. Whereas the widespread occurrence of glomeromycotes in the basal liverwort lineages is well documented, knowledge of the distribution of ascomycetes and basidiomycetes in derived thalloid and leafy clades is more fragmented. Our discovery that the ramifi ed and septate rhizoids of the Schistochilaceae, the sister group to all other ascomycete-containing liverworts, are packed with fungal hyphae prompted this study on the effects of the fungi on rhizoid morphology, host specifi city, the cytology of the association, and a molecular analysis of the endophytes. Two species of Pachyschistochila and their fungi were grown axenically. Axenic rhizoids were unbranched and nonseptate. Reinfected with their own fungus and that from the other species, both Pachyschistochila species produced branched and septate rhizoids identical to those in nature. Woronin bodies and simple septa identifi ed the fungus as an ascomycete referable, according to phylogenetic analyses of ITS sequences, to the Rhizoscyphus ( Hymenoscyphus ) ericae aggregate, also found in other liverwort – ascomycete associations and in mycorrhizas in the Ericales. Healthy hyphae and host cytoplasm suggest that the Schistochilafungus association refl ects a balanced mutualistic relationship. The recent dating of the divergence of the Jungermanniales from the fungus-free Porellales in the Permian and the origins of the Schistochilaceae in the Triassic indicate that these associations in liverworts predate the appearance of the Ericales.
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